WTA News

Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies
Saturday, November 13, 2004

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:
James Hughes Ph.D.
Executive Director
Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies
http://ieet.org

New Institute to Provide Balanced Views on Human Enhancement Technologies

Willington, CT, USA—November 9, 2004—When should parents be permitted to genetically enhance their children?  How can we regulate drugs that improve memory and vigor in ways that respect cognitive liberty? How can we avoid exacerbating inequality as human enhancement technologies spread?

The mission of the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies is to become a center for responsible, constructive approaches to emerging human enhancement technologies. We believe that technological progress can be a catalyst for positive human development so long as we ensure that technologies are safe and equitably distributed.

As yet there has been no institutional home for the consideration of the ethical challenges of emerging human enhancement technologies free from both anti-regulatory dogmas that deny the legitimacy of democratic public policy, and technophobic red herrings such as anxieties about transgressing the boundaries of humanness.  The Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies intends to fill that gap.

The Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies will be directed by Oxford University philosopher Nick Bostrom Ph.D., who chairs the Board of Directors, and bioethicist James J. Hughes Ph.D., of Trinity College in Hartford Connecticut USA, and who will serve as Executive Director.
The IEET is incorporated as a nonprofit organization in the United States, but its Board of Directors come from Spain, Canada, the UK and the United States.

The IEET has appointed six 2004-2005 Fellows: nano-policy thinker Mike Treder; development policy futurists Jose Cordeiro and Jamais Cascio; biogerontologist Aubrey de Grey; human rights writer Dale Carrico; and philosopher, and science fiction author and critic, Russell Blackford.

The Fellowships, internships and work of the IEET are structured around six programs of action: Global Health; Relationships, Community and Technology; Consequences and Ethics of Emerging Technologies; Self-Determination and Human Rights; Longer, Better Lives; and Visions of Utopia and Dystopia.

Specific activities of the IEET include placing essays in newspapers and journals, underwriting selected research and analysis, promoting leading thinkers through events and publicity campaigns, and producing publications, journals and audio-visual materials. In particular the IEET has assumed management of the Journal of Evolution and Technology which has published academic research on questions of human enhancement and technological futurism since 1998.

The Institute will organize several events per year in Europe and North America. In July 2005 the IEET will co-sponsor a conference with the World Transhumanist Association in Caracas Venezuela, focusing on human enhancement technologies and the developing world. In September 2005 the IEET will co-sponsor a conference on Human Rights and Human Enhancement with the Center for Cognitive Liberty and Ethics.

For more information: http://ieet.org or
Contact: director@ieet.org
Phone: 860-297-2376

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